Zibelthiurdos is a
Thraciangod of heaven,
lightning and rain, whose name is known mainly from epigraphic monuments. The only known reference to this god so far in ancient literature is in
Cicero's speech against Pizon, where he is mentioned under the name Jovi Vrii (Iuppiter Urius).[1][2] According to Cicero, Jupiter Urius had the most ancient and venerated of the barbarian temples, which was sacked by invading armies and resulted in diseases from which those afflicted never recovered.
There is not enough information to draw clear conclusions about his cult, worship, or functions. The preserved images give reason to connect Zibelthiurdos with the ancient Greek God
Zeus the Thunderer; he is depicted holding a lightning bolt in his raised right hand, and to his right an eagle with wings spread out.
Names and epigraphy
In the epigraphic evidence, the deity's name is attested in 12 documents, alternatively written as Zbelthiourdes, Zbelthourdos, Zbelsourdos or Zbersurdos, Zbeltiurdus, Svelsurdus.[3]
a dedication from
Moesia made by a Mucaporis to a Διί Ζβελθιούρδῳ;
an inscription in Skopia to a DEO ZBELTHIURDO;
an inscription from
Perinthus to a Διί Ζιβελσούρδῳ.
According to epigraphic evidence, the name of Greek god
Zeus is found in Thracian inscriptions associated with Zbelthiurdos and variations: Zbelturd, Zbelsurd, Zbeltiurd, Zpelturd. This combination is believed to attest a syncretism between the Greek deity and a local Thracian god of thunder and lightning.[5][6]
Etymology
His name speculatively means "Lightning Carrier" or "Thunderer",[7] but it is uncertain whether Zibelthiurdos is his name or an epithet.[a]
Tomaschek interpreted that Zibel- and Zbel- were the same word, although he believed the former to be the older form (cf. Thracian king Ζιβέλμιος, or
Zibelmios).[9] He also derived Zbel- from a
Proto-Indo-European stem*ģʰeib-.[9]
In another line of scholarship, Dimitar Detschew assumed that the particles Zber- and Zbel- derived from a
Proto-Indo-European stem *ģwer- 'briller, éclairer'. As for the second part of the names, despite the grand variation, they all derived from a stem *twer/*tur 'to have', while *dho would indicate a nomen agentis suffix. Thus, his name would mean 'he who has the lightning'.[10]
Related words
Per Tomaschek, further descendants of *ģʰeib- would include
Lithuanianžaibas "lightning", verb žibėti "to shine, to glow", and possibly
Croatianzúblja "torch" and
Slovenezubelj "flame".[9] In the same vein, Bulgarian linguist
Vladimir I. Georgiev proposed a connection to Lithuanian Žiburys 'light, torch'.[11][12]
Bulgarian linguist
Ivan Duridanov [
bg] indicated the word Zbel- is related to
Latvianzibele "lightning".[13]
Legacy
Some scholars have suggested a relation between the
Albanian deity name Shurdh and the second part of the theonym Zibelsurdus.[14][15][16]
Cultic locales
Zibelthiurdos shrines have been found near the village of
Golemo Selo in the
Kyustendil Region – an area inhabited by the Thracian
Dentellets tribe – as well as near Kapitan Dimitrievo village in the
Pazardzhik Province. His image was discovered in a relief from the
Esquiline Hill, where he is depicted along with Yambadula (or
Iambadoule), a figure of an unclear nature.[17]
At least three inscriptions to deity Zbeltiurdus were found in the ancient
Dardanian territory: one in
Kaçanik, another in Ljubanac (near Skopje), and the third in Dovezenac, near
Kumanovë.[18]
^Detschev, Dimitar (1952). "Une triade familiale, dans la religion des Thraces". Bulletin de l'Institut archéologique (in Bulgarian). 18: 50.
^Georgiev, Vladimir I.. "Thrakisch und Dakisch". Band 29/2. Teilband Sprache und Literatur (Sprachen und Schriften [Forts.]), edited by Wolfgang Haase, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1983. p. 1207.
doi:
10.1515/9783110847031-016
^Georgiev, Vladimir I.. "Thrakisch und Dakisch". Band 29/2. Teilband Sprache und Literatur (Sprachen und Schriften [Forts.]), edited by Wolfgang Haase, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1983. p. 1158.
doi:
10.1515/9783110847031-015
^Ferri, Naser (2012).
"Vjerovanja i štovanje bogova u predkršćanskoj Dardaniji" [Cults and Beliefs in Pre-Christian Dardania]. Godišnjak Centra za balkanološka ispitivanja (in Bosnian) (41). Akademija Nauka i Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine: 138 and footnote nr. 23.
Duridanov, Ivan (1985). Die Sprache der Thraker [The language of the Thracians]. Bulgarische Sammlung (in German). Vol. 5. Hieronymus Verlag. p. 69.
ISBN3-88893-031-6.
Treimer, Karl (1971). "Zur Rückerschliessung der illyrischen Götterwelt und ihre Bedeutung für die südslawische Philologie" [On the re-development of the Illyrian world of gods and their importance for South Slavic philology]. In Barić, Henrik (ed.).
Arhiv za Arbanasku starinu, jezik i etnologiju [Archive for Arbanian antiquity, language and ethnology]. Vol. I. R. Trofenik. pp. 27–33.
Vlahov, K. (1980). "Die thrakischen Gottheiten Zberthourdos, Iambadoula und Asdoula". Bulgarian Historical Review (in German). 8: 90–96.
Попов, Димитър [
bg] [Popov, Dimitar]. "
Збелсурд" [Sbelsurd]. In: Годишник на Софийския университет "Св. Кл. Охридски": Исторически факултет, специалност Етнология [ANNUAIRE DE L'UNIVERSITE DE SOFIA "ST. KLIMENT OHRIDSKI", FACULTE D'HISTOIRE – STUDIA ETHNOLOGICA]. Tom 2. София: Университетско издателство "Св. Кл. Охридски", 2012. pp. 113-120.
ISSN1312-9406.
Popa, Al; Popa, V. (1982). "Un Intéressant Monument Représentant Jupiter-Zbelsurdos". Latomus (in French). 41 (2): 353–355.
JSTOR41532498.
Tudor, D. (1978). "Deux dieux thraco-phrygiens à Drobeta". Hommages à M. J. Vermaseren. Études préliminaires aux religions orientales dans l'Empire romain (E.P.R.O.) (in French). Vol. III. Leiden: Brill. pp. 1269–1280.
doi:
10.1163/9789004295452_020.
ISBN9789004295452.